FloTHERM is powerful 3D computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software that predicts airflow and heat transfer in and around electronic equipment, from components and boards up to complete systems. Learn More →

Improve your Embedded Software Development Flow with the Latest Open Source Technologies

Event

Overview

The GNU toolchain (GCC, binutils, glibc, and gdb) constantly evolves offering both new capabilities and migration challenges to software developers. Mentor Embedded engineers are active in various roles (Maintainers, Steering Committee Members etc.) in open source projects, regularly delivering new features to the components of the embedded toolchain.

The latest Sourcery CodeBench release is an integrated and fully validated toolchain, which now includes updated GNU toolchain components. Explore the benefits of this new release and learn how we can help you with versions of the development toolchain tailored to your unique needs.

What You Will Learn

What’s new in the latest releases of the open source embedded toolchain components- compiler, debugger and more.

Benefits of an optimized and precisely configured toolchain for your custom hardware

About the Presenters

Hollis Blanchard

Hollis Blanchard received a B.S. in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University, and has been hacking on Linux (server and embedded) and hypervisors since about 1998. He is currently the product owner for Mentor Embedded Sourcery Analyzer, a very flexible tool for analyzing trace data. He loves Mercurial and Python, dislikes x86 architecture, and can’t stand Git.

Nathan Sidwell

Nathan Sidwell is the Director of Sourcery Services at Mentor Graphics Embedded Software Division. Previously, Nathan worked at CodeSourcery, acquired by Mentor Graphics in 2010. He has worked with computer architectures and compilation systems for over 25 years. Nathan has been a GCC developer for 15 years, working on components such as the C++ front end, code generation for various established architectures and porting to new architectures.

Who Should Attend

Embedded software developers

Products Covered

Technical Requirements

What do I need to watch and hear this web seminar?

Mentor Graphics’ web seminars are delivered using Adobe Connect. You will be able to login to the seminar room 15 minutes prior to the start time on the day of the presentation. You can hear the audio using your computer’s speakers via VoIP (Voice over IP) and background music will play prior to the beginning of the presentation.